Most people,
no doubt, when they espouse human rights, make their own mental reservations
about the proper application of the word ‘human.’ –Suzanne LaFollette
Not different-but-enough-like-me-that-I-feel-comfortable rights, but human rights.
Not multicolored-but-white-inside rights, but human rights.
I
will believe in equality, not just with my superiors—which is easy—but with
those people I judge as inferior to me. I will believe in equality, not just with people who agree with me--which is easy--but with people who don't agree with me--which is more difficult.
I will remember that it takes
action to ensure the human rights of others, not weariness, and not just talk. That it takes
being for something, and not just
being against something.
I was delighted to hear a college
professor of mine, Jerry
Caris Godard, speak this past Sunday. What a joy to reconnect after these
many years out of school, to come to know former professors as adults, each of
us grey-haired now. His topic was William Blake; he offered
ten “angles of vision” into his “passionate entanglement” with Blake. It was
number eight, among others, that caught my eye: “As my lifelong openness to
others is amplified, I recognize (more explicitly than Blake) that ardent
advocacy of gender equality is a necessary but not sufficient condition to set
sexism aside!”













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